McMullen v. New Orleans Police Department

522 So. 2d 1227, 1988 La. App. LEXIS 809, 1988 WL 20743
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 10, 1988
DocketNo. CA-8507
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 522 So. 2d 1227 (McMullen v. New Orleans Police Department) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McMullen v. New Orleans Police Department, 522 So. 2d 1227, 1988 La. App. LEXIS 809, 1988 WL 20743 (La. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

WARD, Judge.

The City of New Orleans appeals a decision of the City Civil Service Commission reinstating Daniel McMullen to the position of captain in the New Orleans Police Department. We find no manifest error in the Commission's findings of fact and conclude that based upon those facts, the Commission correctly determined no cause for McMullen’s dismissal. We therefore affirm.

McMullen, a twenty-year veteran of the police force and former commander of the Department’s First District, held the position of Deputy Superintendent when he was suspended on December 9, 1985 and dismissed 119 days later following a departmental administrative hearing. This disciplinary action was based upon alleged violations of police department rules and procedures which occurred while McMullen was commander of the First District.

All of the alleged violations stem from incidents involving Charles Buie, a young man who had been a civilian volunteer at the First District police station for several years before McMullen took over the command of the District. Buie, described by McMullen as a “police buff,” spent many hours each week at the district station where his assigned duties included supervising janitorial work, running errands, washing police vehicles and serving as receptionist. Through the years, however, because Buie was eager and aggressive he gradually had assumed other duties and responsibilities, including work usually done by police officers or by the Department’s administrative staff.

The first two incidents for which McMul-len was disciplined were very similar. Each involved a request by a French Quarter art gallery for security services during functions at the gallery. Off-duty police officers were to provide the services and be paid by the gallery. Such an arrangement, called a “paid detail” by the police, is common practice and entirely proper. However, in the two incidents at issue in this case, the “paid details” were highly irregular because, although the gallery owner thought she was paying for the officers’ time, the officers who provided the services were on-duty and paid by the City of New Orleans. The City’s allegations of what occurred are described by Police Superintendent Warren Woodfork in the letter notifying McMullen of his dismissal.

Sometime during September, 1984, Ms. Connie Heaphy of the Dyansen Gallery, located at 433 Royal Street, made arrangements with Mr. Charles Buie for a paid detail to be worked by four police officers on September 19, 1984, around the Gallery. A check for two hundred and eighty-eight dollars ($288.00) was issued by the Gallery payable to Dan McMullen and Associates on September 18, 1984. Ms. Heaphy personally deliv[1229]*1229ered this check and invitations for the Gallery event to you, Captain McMullen, on September 18, 1984, at the First District Station. At this time she also informed you of the locations around the Gallery where she desired the police officers, who would be working the detail, to be stationed.
On September 19, 1984, you instructed Sgt. Raymond Fournet to have on-duty police officers handle this paid detail assignment around the Gallery and Sgt. Fournet complied with your instructions. The check for two hundred and eighty-eight dollars ($288.00) was endorsed by you for deposit.
Ms. Heaphy made arrangements with Charles Buie to have a second paid detail for seven officers at the Gallery on November 20, 1984. A check for five hundred and seventy-six dollars ($576.00) was issued by the Dyansen Gallery, payable to Dan McMullen and Associates. This check was picked up by Charles Buie at the Gallery. Approximately one week prior to the event at the Gallery, Ms. Heaphy delivered four invitations for the event to you, personally, at the First District Station. As you were scheduled to be out of town during this second event, sometime after meeting with Ms. Heaphy, you met with Sgt. Fournet and instructed him to handle this detail with on-duty officers just as he had handled the previous detail at the Gallery. Sgt. Fournet complied with those instructions and assigned on-duty officers to handle that assignment. Ms. Heaphy saw you approximately one week after the event and thanked you for arranging the detail. The check for five hundred and seventy-six dollars ($576.00) was endorsed with the name Dan McMullen, with the initials “CB”, and cashed by Mrs. Mildred F. Gilbert for Charles Buie.

McMullen’s description of these incidents differs from the City’s version only on a few significant points. McMullen claims that when he received the request for the September detail from Buie, who had taken the necessary information from Heaphy over the telephone, he denied the request because he felt the area was sufficiently covered by foot patrols of NOPD officers and state troopers, who had been assigned to New Orleans for the 1984 World Exposition. McMullen placed in evidence a memorandum from Buie to. McMullen which requests a total of eight officers and state troopers to be detailed to the 400 block of Royal Street for “Mayor’s Function ... Grand Opening Mindi Gutman Art Gallery.” Written on the memo and initialed by McMullen is the notation, “Disapproved. 2nd platoon to handle as workload permits.” McMullen admits cashing the $288.00 check for Buie who told him that it had inadvertently been made payable to the account McMullen used to disburse payments to officers for paid details McMullen arranged. He explains that he did not connect the check to Buie’s memorandum requesting a paid detail for two reasons. First, the check was from the Dyansen Gallery and Buie’s request was for the Mindi Gutman Gallery. And second, because the usual practice was for details to be paid for after the services were rendered and the client had been sent an invoice, Buie told McMullen and McMullen believed the Dyansen check was for a previous paid detail, when in fact, Buie had told Heaphy that payment in advance was required.

McMullen explains the second “paid detail” in much the same way as the first. He denies all knowledge that money was received for placing police officers in front of the gallery. He says that his signature was forged on the second check endorsement.

The only significant irreconcilable discrepancy in McMullen’s version of the incidents is his insistence that he got the check for the first detail from Buie, while Heaphy is certain that she gave it directly to McMullen. Despite McMullen’s obvious interest in the outcome of the hearing and Heaphy’s disinterest, the Commission chose to believe McMullen. The Commission’s conclusion regarding the incidents was that Charles Buie alone planned and carried out both. After a thorough review of the testimony and documentary evidence presented at the hearing, we find no manifest error in the Commission’s determination that [1230]*1230McMullen was not directly involved in the scheme. We therefore cannot say the Commission abused its discretion in concluding that the City failed to prove that the “paid detail” incidents were cause for disciplinary action.

Based upon the paid detail incidents, McMullen was arrested for malfeasance in office and public payroll fraud. He was ultimately tried and acquitted. The arrests, however, caused McMullen’s suspension for violating the departmental regulation requiring adherence to law.

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Related

McMullen v. New Orleans Police Department
523 So. 2d 1338 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1988)

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Bluebook (online)
522 So. 2d 1227, 1988 La. App. LEXIS 809, 1988 WL 20743, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcmullen-v-new-orleans-police-department-lactapp-1988.